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About no till

Posted by kimmsr 4a/5b-MI (My Page) on
Sat, Nov 3, 12 at 7:05

The newest issue of Organic Gardening Magazine has a very good article about no till gardening. There is also a good article about circular gardens which gave me pause about why most all of our gardens are rectangular, especuially since most of what we use to apply water covers a circle.


Follow-Up Postings:

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RE: About no till

Gardeners run around in little circles most of the time nomally. The only way to get them to walk a straight line is to have them walk the edge of the garden. Besides, what would they line thier rows up with?


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it will be what suits for me rectangular for ease of reaching the whole garden without the need to stand on plus rectangle seems to fit better with little wasted space, yep can see the watering thing but we water by hand held hose or bucket, so water is not wasted, by irrigating over the plants.

we are going to get at least one old corrugated tank to use for a garden, but we are hoping we can elongate it some so it is not full round.

just how wee see it and why we do it.

len


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RE: About no till

I always thought it was good to till the soil several weeks before you plant to expose the bugs that had overwintered in the garden. Like stink bugs.


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Indiana clay turns into a brick with the snow melt and spring rains. The water makes it settle and compact.Im adding tons of OM every year. Its getting better, but still has along way to go. I'm starting to grow herbs in the Garden and plants that self seed. No till would help those areas alot. Now I have to move sage bushes and oregano in the spring to till, thats extra time and energy.


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After adding 4 inches of local sphagnum peat moss and some medium/coarse sand, I have instant [and yes, instant] loose soil in my clay/loam and silty clay/loam soil. I mix this all well up for about 7 inches down which makes a foot of soil so nice that I could do no till with ease, but I wish to not do that. Yes, I add lots of organic matter also.


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Posted by zackey GA 8b (My Page) on Sat, Nov 3, 12 at 19:16

"I always thought it was good to till the soil several weeks before you plant to expose the bugs that had overwintered in the garden. Like stink bugs."

Tilling- a brilliant breakthrough/idea if you ask me. Farm land that would have never offered the air porosity of the same land tilled. Tilling and using conventional methods proves extremly productive making it the most widely used method.

On the flip side. Tilling the soil destroys soil organisms homes. Those organisms in a functioning No-till will till the soil for you. They will make a great happy home filled with air porosity so roots can grow fast.

In a no-till it takes months or years to reach the same porosity as a field tilled in just one day.


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All in all. A conventional till will provide instant porosity in the soil. Then the soil has to be tilled again the next season. A no till requires upfront care of mulching then the soil organisms do the work for you. I do enjoy the results I get from a basic till method, but I can back the endless advantages that no-till holds.


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When I lived in SC, I had a friend who's family had been farmers for many years......generations. They owned and leased several hundred acres on which they grew soybeans, corn, and winter wheat.

This was (is) an educated family, with at least three generations of Clemson graduates. Some years ago, after many long months of searing heat and drought, they decided to put hundreds of their acres into no-till practices. After that, their harvest yields (bushels per acre) were highest in the state for several years. :-)


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The old home farm around me is no till.Some other farms nearby are not. I don't see where the no till is better producing, but it does save fuel and perhaps some compaction, and in some cases it could help against erosion. That said, I prefer mild tilling in the gardens.


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all i can iterate is we have never tilled any of our gardens and we get good produce, these new gardens started producing just short of 2 months after construction. one example zucchinis from flower to table in 24 hours.

seen many a farmer tilling the soil pick with a cloud of wind erosion soil following him, looks inept and is inane.

len


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It's a common-sense issue. Either concept taken to an extreme is a problem. Till as little as possible should be the maxim. How little is possible will vary a lot by circumstances.


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I just lightly tilled in some rotted horse manure. I believe that that manure is better off incorporated a bit rather than evaporating more nitrogen into the air...plus it will finish rotting faster before next year's crop.

No till farm soils are slower to warm up and dry out in the spring here. With the style of farming today, that is a disadvantage. Also the crop likely is a bit slower to take off initially...just like organics compared to booster started crops.


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Mulching down millions of acres of farmland isn't going to happen. Some soils need the OM to be plowed in at the 8" level, because without that, there wouldn't be any OM even in the 4" level.

As opposed to the either/or scenario, people might be wise to consider whether a certain practice is valuable or detrimental to the health of the soils they have and the environment they are in. Comparing apples to oranges has never taught us anything. :)


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Some studies have fund that if one tills, at the same depth, year after year, it creates a hard layer. The back of the tine compacts at the bottom of the trough. A root barrier. They suggest one should run a chisel plow to break through this layer.

I prefer the cardboard and mulch approach.

Eric


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Can someone tell me what is the harm of a little garden tilling at varying depths? This is usually to plant, ridge for things like sweetpotatoes, and to incorporate amendments.


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Nice photo Eric.


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Yes Eric a chisel plow for tilled and a Double fork for no till. Night crawlers do the job to with a lot less input from me. I do till some parts of the garden with my old gas powered unit. It seems to work best for working organic matter into my silt loam old swamp bottom soil, and keeps it from compacting from the rain.

Curt


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Can someone tell me what is the harm of a little garden tilling at varying depths? This is usually to plant, ridge for things like sweetpotatoes, and to incorporate amendments.

I'd think not much harm at all.

I stopped tilling my garden several years ago, preferring to mound all kinds of organic matter and compost on top as a mulch and letting the worms do the hard work. But thats on shallow clay/sand stone, and I couldn't till any deeper than 6" if I tried.


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Earth worms sure do till, but dont forget about the microorganisms!!! No till is really just letting nature till for you! :) It may take longer but it is natural.

Just remember the day man took a tool and used it to loosen the soil was they day till was invented and the day someone was trying to make something easier or more effective or productive. Understand that till methods feed the world today.


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TMG "Understand that till methods feed the world today." Why on an Organic Garden Forum do you keep rubbing the rhubarb. Look for a Organic farming forum and post your rhetoric there please. My ears are ringing from the echos of your post.

Curt


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in reality the till method does not feed the world, it reaps profits for the middle men who convince farmers to rape the habitat in pursuit of a bottom line that the farmer never really seems to achieve.

our gardens no fertilisers as such just recycled grass and food scraps over produce we have given heaps away again as usual in these gardens just over 3 months old.

seems to be some or a lot of gaia sort of thinking eg.m,. exhault the rich and punish teh poor who simply want to live simply.

"It's the same the whole world over It's the poor what gets the blame It's the rich what gets the pleasure Ain't it all a bloomin' shame?" out of a song sung around the 1930's

in the 40s and 50's our farmers lived in our communities we all did well simply with produce that freshness that well and truly eclipsed what we buy today and all using some pyrethrum or maybe derris dust in systemic applications.

lets move forward back to the past.

len


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len, I think you may be waxing a bit nostalgic. I grew on the farm in the "40s and '50s. I don't recall such a period.


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**Understand that till methods feed the world today**

No, Oil feeds your world today, but not for much longer!


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no wayne,

where i grew up in a sattelite suburb for returned servicemen that is exactly what we had before our farmers started getting influences from across the pacific, with the help of bad science.

eggs came fresh from the egg farm lots of double yokers and some triples

the farmer bought his wares on the back of a truck at least a couple of times a week

milk was delivered to our milk pail with lid fresh from the cow every morning no pasteurisation.

till farming now delivers land degredation, and more and more expensive produce of which the farmer gets least.

just in case you missed it i'm in australia.

len


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IME with many years of mulching and little tilling on light soil, the result is a highly fungal very low-N situation, though very live and stable. Legumes (especially, because the rhizobia are at high populations, probably the best effect of low-till) and root crops do quite well in that situation, leafy greens do well enough, but things like squash, potatoes, corn and other heavy-fruiting crops produce poorly.


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Say len, I've lived in a farming communittee for my entire life and the mistakes of the 30s that degraded the land have for the most part been rectified.
Now the small farmer is disappearing and land use is turning to trees, starting with pine, which of course means no-till. The fertility of these soils have plummetted as has SOM.
So your perspective doesn't correspond with what I've experienced and see today. Gardening is much, much different than providing food for the entire planet. :)


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"No-till advantages
Many producers find that no-till crop production systems help them save time, conserve moisture, and reduce erosion. And depending on your current tillage system, eliminating tillage passes by converting to no-till could offer a significant cost savings on labor, fuel, and other machinery operating costs. You should also consider the impact of reduced insurance, interest, and depreciation costs resulting from converting to a no-till system.
No-till may have an impact on your bottom line in terms of timely planting. Because with no-till you are in and out of the field faster, you can cover more acres and finish within narrow planting windows that offer optimum yield potential

No-till disadvantages
Three potential disadvantages of no-till are as follows. First, using burndown herbicides instead of tillage to eliminate competition from early-season weeds is relatively expensive, raising production costs. Second, the crop residue left on the soil in no-till systems hinders soil warming and drying, making planting more difficult and germination conditions less than ideal. Third, no-till poses many new management challenges for the new no-till producer. For example, in no-till soybean an increase in residue on soil surface leads to an increase in soil moisture that in turn increases the potential for soybean root diseases."

They talked about less erosion and less time in the field, and also less moisture loss. The disadvantages seem to be well organized in three topics. Hmm strange...

http://www.ipm.iastate.edu/ipm/icm/2000/9-18-2000/notill.html


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The heavy amount of pesticides and herbicides that are needed with notill farming is WAY higher then conventional till. The conventional till kills homes for bag bugs and weeds, so notill needs to adress this with pesticides. Wow I am learning a lot about notill!;)

O wait there is more.


"No-Till Fails For These 10 Reasons

While many people are convinced no-till is the way to farm, many others are convinced it does not work. Clearly no-till farming can work, but failures typically occur because of one or more of these 10 reasons
Selecting the wrong seed variety
1No-till seedlings may experience cooler and wetter seedbeds. Planting varieties that tolerate these conditions is important.
2. Lack of crop rotation
Crop rotation is important to break up disease, insect and weed cycles. Double cropping the same crops every year is not a crop rotation. A field must grow a different crop at the same time of year in consecutive years to be in a rotation.
3. Lack of equipment
The main equipment needed is a no-till planter and a sprayer. The technology of both of these has improved significantly in the past decade. Using old equipment may be of as little benefit as using the wrong equipment.
4. Trying to reduce inputs and expense
Often, producers try to use lower rates of herbicide or fewer herbicide applications than needed. It is wise to plan on spending at least as much on herbicide as would have been spent on tillage. Time, labor, soil moisture, and wear and tear on equipment may all be saved, but not pesticide dollars.
5. Failure to correct nutrient deficiencies before starting
Fertilizer and lime can be surface-applied, but they don't move much below the top 1 inch of soil without some type of tillage. Ideally, soil nutrient levels should be adequate throughout the rooting depth and not just in the top inch of soil; yields may suffer if the levels aren't sufficient.
6. Failure to leave enough residue
Residue serves many functions, such as catching precipitation, feeding beneficial soil microorganisms, preventing topsoil and nutrients from eroding, covering bare soil so weeds have difficulty germinating and preventing soil crusting.
7. Not having equipment properly adjusted
Since pesticides are heavily relied upon in no-till, sprayers must be properly equipped, calibrated and operated. Likewise, pressure on disk openers and closing wheels on planters and drills must also be properly adjusted.
8. Lack of knowledge
No-till farming is not the same as conventional farming. It involves much more than simply not plowing. It requires different skill sets to optimize all the required inputs.
9. Lack of attention to detail
To illustrate this point, consider this example: a plow controls all small weeds equally well, but pesticides are more selective. Spraying at the right time and right rate with the best equipment does no good if the wrong pesticide is used for the target weed or other pest. Everything must be done correctly.
10. A failure to commit to making it work
This is the reason for most no-till failures. If a producer doesn't think no-till will work and doesn't want to make it work, it probably won't. No-till farming is a commitment to a long- term process of soil management. The production benefits of no-till are greater in year 20 than in year two. This means no-tilling for three years and then plowing every fourth year isn't really no-till, it's just not plowing for three years"

http://www.noble.org/ag/soils/notillfails/


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maplerbirch, you saw one lifestyle i saw another, you need to get over that difference you have your recollections i have mine here in australia, of course all farming caused issues of erosion but never so much as teh new broadacre/factory farming methods.

TMG is really pushing a barrow by the looks of it got some sort of agenda, can't see the forest(what's left after farming) for the trees. but he has his right or her right to an opinion even if pushed with some force.

might be driven by that greek mythology. blame the poor and down trodden for what the powerful do.

anyhow leave it with you for now just accept you are i a world media.

take care there are really more important issues.

we grow naturally organically and use no man made applications.

len


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I agree Len, I think there is a hidden agenda. TMG keeps pushing us to look at videos. The speaker on these videos, makes a living speaking, selling books / magazines and possibly stealing. He has been charged with several counts of wire fraud. Penn and Teller well....?

I'd like see better sources to back up your statements TMG.

Eric


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Very obviously no one making any comments here has read the article. All I see are the old arguments restated indicating most do not grasp the no till concept.


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eric_wa,

I have posted no videos here in this notill post at all. What are you talking about?

Here is the sources for my above posts.

http://www.noble.org/ag/soils/notillfails/

http://www.ipm.iastate.edu/ipm/icm/2000/9-18-2000/notill.html

If you will notice I stated both the advantages and disadavantages of notill gardening.


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len, I didn't mean to set you off, especially about world media and propaganda. My only point was that what errors that were done in the past do not justify the errors we are doing now.
I speak strictly from a sense of soil biology and botanical science that keeps the plants happy.

In our climate and soils, no-till has very little value in large acreage food porduction. In fact, I would hope that we(our farmers) would recognize how things could be done better. Perhaps then, we might be able to switch to no-till and the soil would sustain; but to go to no-till with what we have is folly.

Being a half of a globe away and not even being in the same hemisphere, I certainly am not going to tell you what your experiences were, and I hope that you do not discount mine. Together, we may come to a sensible answer. :)


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What qualifies as "no till", Kimm, in your opinion? Can one make a hole with one's finger to put a seed into, or do we need to go to Fukoaka's "nendo-dango" technique be truly no till?

The point is that nearly any system of food production requires soil disturbance at some point. I don't need to read the OG article to know what it's about, of course they simply mean to put away the roto-tiller that most gardeners way over-use.


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The article talks about carbon sequestration and that tilling soil releases large amounts of carbon tht contribute to global warming. Tilling soils require large amounts of a non renewable resource to prepare the soil for planting, weed and pest control, and then harvesting.
No till methods use much less of those.
I posted information about that article in the hopes it would promote a discussion about wha the article stated and not a rehash of the old arguments about no till that I have seen. How can anyone reasonably, intelligently, discuss a subject one has not read?


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Kimm, I didn't read the article, and I shan't. Nevertheless, I have considerable experience with a wide spectrum of tillages, ranging from plowing and rotovating by tractor through rototilling to hand-tools only for many years. What I haven't practiced is no soil disturbance whatsoever for long periods. Have you? Can you reasonably and intelligently discuss something you have never practiced?


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Pulled from a UGA bulletin:

"In a no-till or limited-till system, the land is not plowed or is plowed infrequently."

Not too many gardeners are using a turning plow, though what a turning plow does is analogous to turning sod with a spade. A typical garden "roto-tiller" is arguably worse for soil life when used frequently than plowing is. Old-fashioned gardening used a spade and a fork, which is certainly tillage in my book.

Do you, Kimm, want to say what it is you mean by "no till" or shall it remain a mystery?


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At the link is the article in question.

My first question is what kind of soil(s) are they talking about? They must be pretty deep to sequester so much carbon in the form of roots.

Here is a link that might be useful: link


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Also I thought that the increased bacterial numbers attributed to organic no till would burn up organic matter faster.? I think the main shortcoming in conventional no till is the lack of green and cover crops and the lack of additional compost.


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"or shall it remain a mystery?"

lol yea pretty much! :)


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Ah, David, now you can intelligently discusss the article and not simply repeat old arguments about something that is not in the discussion. I gather that there are some people here that are against learning anything new.


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Wait, what about davids question? Hmm speeking of against learning anything new?


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There is at least one person here incapable of expressing any ideas or opinions of their own other than one tired refrain.


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"Posted by TheMasterGardener1 5B (My Page) on Fri, Nov 23, 12 at 11:23

Wait, what about davids question? Hmm speeking of against learning anything new? "

I said this because it was odd you did not adress their question. I was interested in hearing more.


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It's quite obviously impossible to have a sustainable controlled food-production system without any soil disturbance. Sooner or later undesired plants will dominate and the food-production will drop to little or none. Even in the so-called "food forest" undesired plants must be uprooted from time to time and that is soil disturbance.

To speak of "no till" when it comes to annual crop production is a contradiction. Tillage, or soil disturbance, can be reduced, but it cannot be eliminated without eventually eliminating the crops.


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True, Pat. The no till soybeans are planted in a narrow strip that is cut and kind of "tilled". The ammonia in cases of corn side dressing gets injected about 5 inches deep in a rip cut. between rows.


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  • Posted by eric_wa San Juan, z8 WA (My Page) on
    Fri, Nov 23, 12 at 21:50

"According to Moyer, the carbon equation changes dramatically for organic agriculture. "In organic systems, just the opposite appears to be the case; carbon is sequestered at greater depths in no-till systems than tilled systems. The extended root production, along with the increased soil macro- and microbiological life, sequesters the carbon deeper in the soil."

"There is no doubt that healthy, well-structured soil supports robust plants and abundant harvests. Untilled soil supports numerous worm holes, ant nests, and other subterranean tunnels that increase water penetration. Soil aggregates clumps of soil particles held together with organic matter also tend to be larger and more abundant in untilled soil, which improves the water-retention capability of the soil. Finally, untilled soil tends to have a healthier population of plant-supporting soil organisms than tilled soil."

The article gives us numbers / results, not technique. What does it matter what the soil base is.

Eric


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  • Posted by RpR_ 3-4 (My Page) on
    Sat, Nov 24, 12 at 1:30

No-till.
Well now one would think something that uses no-till is a pasture.
Read this page.

http://www.soilandhealth.org/01aglibrary/010125yeomans/010125ch5.html


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I just found out that most of the corn grown in the usa is grown using no-till!! Over 70% of the crops grown in Argentina are grown with no-till!!


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  • Posted by rdak z5MI (My Page) on
    Sat, Nov 24, 12 at 3:55

On my home plots (raised beds) I usually just lasagna compost, etc.

Oh, every few years I might take a spade to them and turn the soil over to get rid of adjacent tree roots moving into the beds.

But answer me this please: In large farm operations, if heavy equipment is used to plant and harvest crops, etc.., doesn't tilling help to counteract compaction?

(You gotta get rid of the hardpan layer but there are chisel disks that can be used to do this.)


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What passes for "no till" on many farms today means you run a disc over the field to incorporate the stubble into the soil instead of plows. There is still the use of large amounts of carbon based fuels as well as the release of large amounts of CO2 from the soil with that "no till" method.
Tilling often creates problems such as hardpan, only it would be called plow pan instead. Chisel plows are often used to "break up" that hardpan and are often an implement rented by the local soil conservation district since the cost of purchasing one is extreme. You also need a really big tractor to pull one.
If, as the articles suggests, no till sequesters more CO2, uses less carbon based fuel, and produces yields comparative to "conventional" farming practices why would an organic gardener/farmer not use no till practices?


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Kimm, I am impressed by a very rare original statement from yourself! So it seems you allow for the possibility that the term "no-till" is a misnomer.

So now we have a starting point for an actual discussion. What we are talking about is different kinds and amounts of tillages. What the article is talking about is mulching to reduce weed domination and pulling weeds by hand and doing any tillage that does happen with hand-tools. I did that for years, and still do. It's fine, there is nothing wrong with it, per say, and it does have all the advantages as noted. It also has limitations.

The biggest is that it is not easy to introduce important materials, for example finished compost, rock powders, etc, throughout the active soil profile. Another is that adhering strictly to layering rather than incorporation on light soils leads to very low levels of some macro-nutrients. That has been my experience. Occasional flipping of the soil can be useful. Flipping soil is tillage, whether with a spade or a turning plow.


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kimm says, "What passes for "no till" on many farms today means you run a disc over the field to incorporate the stubble into the soil instead of plows."

Not in my book or area.

The no till farm soil is firmer than chisel tilled soil [ a very common tillage on non no till]. This chisel/rip/strip tillage partially incorporates residue.

I am with Pat on using some incorporating tillage on home gardens. I also doubt that mycorhizae filiments overwinter on annuals in colder regions.


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  • Posted by pt03 2b Southern Manitob (My Page) on
    Sat, Nov 24, 12 at 12:00

I have no doubt many use their own personal definitions of the various tillage terms and even the equipment. It is also likely that different ag organizations have their own definitions. Until everyone uses similar definitions, discussions just go around and around.

Lloyd

Here is a link that might be useful: Tillage, Organic Matter and Crop Residue Management


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The biggest misunderstanding about microbes and the mychorihizae filaments, is that the belief, that tilling can destroy their very existance.
That is like saying that a broom dipped in Lysol can sterilize a hospital. :)


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Thanks LLoyd for the informational link. What I call no-till is zero no-till. The only openings in the soil is for seeding and in some cases the incorporation of ammonia.

I like some tilling in my gardens though as I can amend the the texture and structure quickly and in the desired direction easily. In large fields I can see where the no-till and limited tillage is likely better because cover/green crops are the exception and not the rule. It is pretty easy to do home gardens right, but it is much more effort to do it on 3,000 acres.


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Useful info, Lloyd.

And on a home garden level, 'tilling' is running your 7 hp tiller over your garden/flower beds - or not. :-)


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Some may say that some tillage is harmful to earthworms.

I believe that if you have the organic material there, the worms will come. Yes, some may be disturbed or hurt by tilling, but if you plant cover crops like the "tillage" radishes in the fall, they do the work of earthworms. They bring up minerals, fiberize channels for air and drainage, add organic matter, leave holes for warming in the spring, and help to bring some nitrogen over the winter while leaving the soil mellow.


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Hey if most of our corn is grown with a notill method then it works, period!


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The very act of seeding grains into the soil could probably be thought of as tilling the soil. The very act of planting most everything could be thought of as tilling the soil since to do so you would need to disturb the soil. The term "no till" may be a misnomer for some unable to grasp a concept and probably for those the term "minimal tilling" should be used.
By the way, I am not the one that concieved of the term "no till", but from the start I did understand that term to mean "minimal tillage" and not absolutely no turning of the soil.


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Ok, that will be salutary, I'll refer to what we are discussing as minimal till and you (since you grasp the concept and therefor have no need for this pointless thread in any case) will continue to mis-call it no-till.

And, to re-iterate, since I guess you weren't paying attention, crops can be sown with truly zero soil disturbance. It is a method invented by Masanobu Fukoaka, and I insist that you go read about his work (starting with the 'one straw revolution') and then discuss it with me rather than me simply telling you what I'm talking about. I will say that I have tried the method a few times and found it pretty ineffective in my conditions and climate, which are quite different from southern Japan.


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I have read Fukoaka's work, along with many others and I find that Sir Albert Howard, Lady Eve Balfour, Friend Sykes, and J. I. Rodale have said it all already. Those that have written most about organic gardening since the mid 1960's are simply restating what has been said better by these others.
Perhaps this link might be of some use to a few. Just bear with the beginning ad about someone named Justin Bieber.

Here is a link that might be useful: a not till video


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"(since you grasp the concept and therefor have no need for this pointless thread in any case)"

Yea really.


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Let's see if it's possible to cut through your didactic rhetoric:

How would you convert a piece of pasture that has not been tilled in a very long time? To make it a thought exercise that works in your one-size-fits-all way of thinking, lets pretend this pasture is in MI near a very large body of fresh water.


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I saw something about a farm in MI that alomost went broke because they decided to try no-till. I still want to let everyone know that most of our corn is in fact grown with 'notill'.


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The type of soil you're working with and what you're trying to grow should dictate what method you use.

There is no one-size-fits-all method that works for every soil. Well, tilling works for every soil, but it can become both excessive work and cause damage over time in some areas. No-till amendments in areas with pH issues (esp. high pH in high temperature areas where organic amendments "burn" before incorporating into the soil) or trying to grow sweet potatoes in heavy clay doesn't lead to anything a grower would consider positive. You can no-till amend high pH issues a lot easier in Wisconsin compared to Utah. You can no-till sweet potatoes a lot easier in Oregon compared to North Carolina.

If you're "blessed" with nice, loamy soil you can no-till your heart out whether you formed it with amendments or it was already there. If you're growing a mixed-planting home garden and you want to no-till you might have to pass on growing some stuff unless you can condition the soil before you start a no-till method.

When it comes to soil, gardening in Arizona has different considerations than gardening in Iowa than gardening in South Carolina...etc

Texture, pH management, nutrient management, and any additions you make to change any of these react differently in different types of soil.


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RE: About no till

Ah, Mr. Brown. You keep rehashing the same old points again and again, ad nauseaum.
If you really had read about no till you would know that most all proponents of that practice will agree that sometimes tilling is necessary, but that once the soil has been properly prepped tilling is not necessary again.


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RE: About no till

I will indeed keep rehashing your same old edicts again and again simply to spare people here who might not know better from thinking that your recommendations will get good results in Arizona or Saskatchewan or Arabia. Or to prevent them from destroying a piece of pasture to make OM to improve a few feet of garden space.

Nc-crn has the correct view: nearly every factor in crop production can vary. We could correctly call them variables. Your edicts carry no allowance for variance, which means they are true only in certain circumstances.

For instance, once soil has been "properly prepped", tilling is not necessary EVER again? Never is a long time. Even the working lifetime of a gardener is a long time, and I'd be willing to bet that such an area will have to be tilled again, in some way, or else it will cease to be usefully productive within some timescale that would be unacceptable to most gardeners.


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RE: About no till

Adjusting pH in the root zone without tilling is very hard (or time consuming, like 3-10 years time consuming) unless you only want to adjust the first 2" of soil.

If you live in an area where your soil experiences pH changes every 1-3 years tilling to at least 6-10" when needed is a lot more beneficial than no-till surface applications. This isn't an issue for everyone, though.

Nutrient movement and soil texture changes are a lot easier than pH adjustments in no-till. pH is a bit harder to adjust without using more expensive fine-particle, liquid suspended applications.

Some soils benefit from a good tilling every few years (3, 5, 10, etc) depending on the pH influences going on in the area...native soil, quality of rain/irrigation, etc.

Some people don't have to deal with this depending on their soil or what they're trying to grow in the soil.


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RE: About no till

I find it VERY useful in my gardens to do at least some tillage. I am not interested in tillage just because uncle Ernie did it or because I used to do it more extensively.

Probably those dropping some seeds into the ground after pulling back some mulch are not doing a very large area of gardening.


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RE: About no till

"Probably those dropping some seeds into the ground after pulling back some mulch are not doing a very large area of gardening."

That's a fair guess, I bet. I do some of my beds that way and it's very limited. Without herbicides, minimal-tillage would not produce much food for the masses, not unless those masses all have little gardens. Which would be an ideal, actually.


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RE: About no till

I hear you wayne 5. I do no till only with transplants. Why you may ask? Well I have a lot of what around here are called Night crawlers thanks to our English friends who hauled them across the pond. and in the spring and fall they can do unbelievable damage to a seedling bed 50% damage is not unusual so Carrots Radish Lettuce and up to bean sized seedlings are damaged. Night crawlers do not like the soil disturbed and will not bother the young plants right after tilling giving the seedlings a chance to grow. Yes I like worms,but sometimes we must take the good with the bad.

Curt


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RE: About no till

  • Posted by RpR_ 3-4 (My Page) on
    Mon, Nov 26, 12 at 21:49

Now I am curious.
I have one garden down in the Hutchinson area of Minn. I am fairly sure you would know the county.
I/we have a LOT of night crawlers.
They can, and do, make lawns far from smooth. If you go out at night bare-foot you can feel them under your toes BUT I have never, ever had them cause problems in the garden.

How do they affect your garden?

I have another garden up in the sandy ground up by St.Cloud and actually transplanted some up there.


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RE: About no till

I didn't think that earthworms would touch a growing plant.


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RE: About no till

OK Where to start. I am a retired widower that gardens for diet and economy. a few years back I started square foot gardening so I could have a kitchen garden and a more varied diet growing vegetables in succession and small plantings. So reading about no till on GW I tried it in a small open bed and in the small hoop house I have. Now In square foot gardening plants are planted in a pattern per square instead of rows. Well I am in the habit of having morning coffee in the hoop house. so looking over the seedlings every morning there would be some missing? What in the world is eating my plants? I see no bugs so I started slipping into the hoop house at night with a red led headlamp the only thing that showed up was Night crawlers grabbing everything and pulling it down their holes. Now do they eat what they pull down I don't know I would guess they do I seem to recall a study in England that said that Crawlers like legumes. I have no link to that study. Charles Darwin's study also said that worms extrude their stomachs onto a leaf to digest it with alkaloids. I assumed he was reporting on live plants or at least fresh picked. Well it boiled down to this I had a 2x2 foot square with 36 spinach plants and ended up with 14 that's a 40% loss. Now that's not the only time it has happened just the first time I found out what was destroying my seedlings. Transplants seem to be to big for them to damage other the some miner leaf damage to lettuce.

Curt P.S. Do I need a new post on this?


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RE: About no till

  • Posted by RpR_ 3-4 (My Page) on
    Tue, Nov 27, 12 at 22:40

Worms can grab and move leaves and gtass. They cannot grab and move onions. Iis physically impossible.

Of course you might have the only earthworms in the world with teeth

Look up basic earthworm biology.


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RE: About no till

I've never heard that earthworms actually attempt to tear loose and consume ot store any type of living material. Leaves and blades of grass must be dead, from my understanding.


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RE: About no till

Been digging hundreds of feet of potatoes lately and thinking about this subject. If one was set on not disturbing soil (ever) producing potatoes would be difficult.


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RE: About no till

In some areas you can no-till potatoes because the natural soil structure allows it.

Clays...the type of clay you see in the North-West are vastly different than the ones you see in the South-East (grey vs "red" and the parent materials). Even though moisture may be similar, the soils of the North-West can allow potato/sweet potato production under no-till a whole lot easier. In the South-East it's a bit trickier to "bad idea."


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RE: About no till

I presume you are talking about the growing under some kind of material, like straw, etc, method. I agree, that is really only viable on heavy soil.


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RE: About no till

A lot of the "grey" clays of the North-West also contain some very nice loamy soil even if they're mostly clay content. It causes a kind of "sticky" feeling to the soil. Potatoes can generally thrive and produce quite well, in many cases better than or just as good as tilled soil. Most of the hardening in these type of clays take place on the surface from moisture drying/cracking the top few mm to inch or so.

In the South-East a lot of the "red" clays can be quite hard throughout the soil profile with little else in the clay soil aside from the clay, itself. Tilling is usually a lot more beneficial.


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RE: About no till

Btw, in those North-West no-till clays it's usually a lot better to have a surface reside or straw in order to keep the plant seedlings from having to work through that dried clay on the top layer. Once they emerge and have some age on them they do just fine.


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RE: About no till

  • Posted by RpR_ 3-4 (My Page) on
    Fri, Nov 30, 12 at 2:29

Growing no-till on Minnesota black-gumbo reduces production considerably.
I have tried it several times with same result.


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grass is the real answer

Everyone has made points I can agree with.
Carbon sequestration works better if the roots can go deep.
The roots go deep at Rodale because they plow deep 2 years and then use no-till the third year.
The organic matter and amendments have been worked deep so the roots go deep.
They reduce erosion with cover crops but they do not eliminate it.
Any act of disturbing the soil no matter how small allows some erosion.

I think we are missing the real solution to the problem.
The real solution is to stop buying corn fed beef (eat grass fed).
Farmers will grow corn as long as people buy it.
It is easier to make beef taste good with corn, but it can be done with grass.
It is just harder.
If managed properly, permanent pastures are the best way to stop erosion and actually build soil.

We should also stop using corn for ethanol even if it is "no-till".
It consumes as much as it produces and still causes erosion.
It is important to keep pushing for true no-till or even partial no-till,
but lets chop off the head of the snake, not the tail.

In my garden, I can only use no-till about every 3-4 years.
Most of the time I disturb the soil by mowing first.
Then I till shallow.
Then I till deep if necessary.
It gives the insects and worms a chance to withdraw.
Then I plant very quickly to cover the soil and feed the mycorrhizal fungus.
Everything recovers quickly.

Here is a link that might be useful: Garden For Nutrition

This post was edited by GreeneGarden on Tue, Dec 11, 12 at 19:25


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RE: About no till

I agree we should cut way back on beef production, as well all animal products.

Also, permanent pasture when poorly managed or on marginal soils is a terrible use of land, much better to let it grow into scrub.


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grass is the real answer

Actually, I think we should eat more goat.
It has a great FCR and makes optimal use of marginal land.

Here is a link that might be useful: Garden For Nutrition


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RE: About no till

  • Posted by jolj 7b/8a-S.C.,USA (My Page) on
    Sat, Dec 8, 12 at 14:56

Are we confusing small gardens with Large framers?
Many till by hand or use a oil power for about 20% of the tilling.
I have turn large layers of Organic matter under( the first sheet composting was always turned under, OGM),with a tiller.
You can till with a shovel & hoe also.
To say TMG is making money off videos is just rude.
kimmsr disagrees with me a lot on no till & knows a lot more about NT, then I.
kimmsr is always posting links & videos,& I never thought kimmsr was making money from the links.
Just trying to get me to see it as he/she does.
Money is not everything, we gardeners know this.


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RE: About no till

Posted by gardenlen s/e qld aust (My Page) on Wed, Nov 21, 12 at 14:27

"TMG is really pushing a barrow by the looks of it got some sort of agenda, can't see the forest(what's left after farming) for the trees. but he has his right or her right to an opinion even if pushed with some force."

Its called thinking Rationally. You should try it some time.

This post was edited by TheMasterGardener1 on Sun, Dec 9, 12 at 13:21


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RE: About no till

I agree we should cut way back on beef production, as well all animal products.

There are large swaths of the country where grazing is about the only sustainable land use. And grass-fed beef is good stuff.

Feedlots are awful.


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